Freaked is a 1993 American black comedy film directed by Tom Stern and Alex Winter, both of whom wrote the screenplay with Tim Burns. Winter also starred in the lead role. Both were involved in the short-lived MTV sketch comedy show The Idiot Box, and Freaked retains the same brand of surreal humour seen in the show. Freaked was Alex Winter's last feature film before he shifted to cameo and television films for many years until 2013's Grand Piano.

Freaked
American VHS cover
Directed by
Written by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyJamie Thompson
Edited byMalcolm Campbell
Music by
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release dates
  • April 24, 1993 (1993-04-24) (USA Film Festival)
  • May 31, 1993 (1993-05-31) (Italy)
  • October 1, 1993 (1993-10-01) (US)
Running time
82 minutes
LanguageEnglish
Budget$12 million[1]
Box office$29,296[2]

Originally conceived as a low-budget horror film featuring the band Butthole Surfers,[3] Freaked went through a number of rewrites, eventually developing into a black comedy set within a sideshow, which was picked up by 20th Century Fox for a feature film. After several poor test screenings and a change in studio executives who then found the film too "weird," the film was pulled from a wide distribution (except for Australia and Japan) and only played on two screens in the United States.

Plot

edit

Skye Daley holds an interview with former child star Ricky Coogin, who recounts a bizarre story that began when he accepted an endorsement with the questionable Everything But Shoes corporation to promote a fertilizer called "Zygrot 24". While initially hesitant, the corporation's CEO manages to get him on board with a large sum of money, and Ricky and his friend Ernie embark on a journey to a South American town called Santa Flan. During the flight, Ricky encounters a fan called Stuey Gluck who pleads him not to promote the fertilizer, but an accident leads to him falling out the plane.

Ricky and Ernie, upon arriving in Santa Flan, find themselves amidst a group of environmentalists protesting Zygrot, and Ricky becomes smitten with volatile environmentalist Julie. Ricky poses as an accident victim and deceives her into joining him and Ernie on a protest trip, but his true identity is eventually revealed and the three are stuck travelling together. They end up taking a detour to a local freakshow called Freek Land, where they encounter a mad scientist called Elijah C. Skuggs. The scientist and his assistant, Toad, capture them and turn the three into freaks, with Julie and Ernie becoming conjoined twins and Ricky partially transforming into a hideous green monster.

Ricky, struggling to adapt to his new life, finds himself among a group of fellow freaks including Ortiz the Dog Boy, giant arthropod Worm, literal anthropomorphic cow Cowboy, the Bearded Lady, and Sockhead. During their first show, Ricky stuns the audience with a Shakespearean monologue before spotting an E.E.S agent, leaping offstage in hopes of rescue. However, after the agent starts mocking him, an enraged Ricky pulls his head off and scares the audience away.

The next day, Ricky learns that Stuey's alive and trying to sell his story, only for the fan to get captured by E.E.S. businessmen. Ricky then attempts to escape only to be captured by Skuggs' henchmen, the Rastafar-eyes, and Skuggs reveals that he plans to mutate Ricky and use him to eliminate the other freaks during the next show. Ricky, Worm, Julie and Ernie sneak off to Elijah's lab that night and make a 'good' batch of Zygrot that'd keep him in control of himself, with hopes of using it to take down Elijah. However - when the tunnel they got to the lab using starts caving in - Ricky has to discard the batch so he can safely get back through. During a meeting between Elijah and the E.E.S. executives, though, Stuey manages to escape captivity and sneaks off with the good Zygrot.

At the show - Ricky strapped to a chair and the other freaks locked in a cage - Stuey attempts to get Ricky's attention only for a crowd member to pour the Zygrot over his head, turning him into a grotesque troll-like version of himself. However, he remains determined to save Ricky and the other freaks, taking down the Rastafar-eyes and - with Julie and Ernie's help - killing Toad. Elijah uses the Zygrot on Ricky and fully transforms him into a monster, and he and Stuey engage in battle onstage. Meanwhile, the E.E.S. executives betray Elijah and attempt to steal his equipment, only for the latter to shoot them with a Zygrot bazooka. The agents and executives melt into primordial goop, reforming into a giant fleshy shoe.

Ricky comes close to killing Stuey, only to snap out of it and spare him after Cowboy reminds him of their soulmate connection. He instead turns to Elijah, breaking his spine and punching him into a vat of Zygrot 24. An FBI task force arrive shortly afterwards having learned what was going on from Stuey's article, saving Ricky and the other freaks and gunning down Skuggs, who emerges from the vat having taken the appearance of Skye Daley.

Cutting back to the interview, it's revealed that Ricky had returned to normal alongside the other freaks after they all took antidotes in the form of macaroons, excluding Stuey, Worm (who dislikes macaroons) and Ortiz (who'd been chasing a squirrel the whole time). It's also revealed that the Skye Daley who'd been interviewing him is actually Skuggs, and he attempts to rise up again only to be gunned down by Julie and Ernie. Ricky and Julie share a kiss and they and the other former-freaks bid farewell to the audience, and the film ends on a frozen shot of Skuggs rising behind them to attack again.

Cast

edit

Production

edit

The film, under the working title of Hideous Mutant Freekz,[4] was conceived around the time Winter and Stern had directed 1988's Bar-B-Que Movie, a short film starring and featuring the music of experimental rock band Butthole Surfers. Winter, Stern and Surfers frontman Gibby Haynes began work on the first draft of the script, envisioning it as an obscene, ultra-violent horror film once again featuring the Butthole Surfers, costing around $100,000.[3] The idea was, as Alex Winter put it, "Beach Blanket Bingo meets The Evil Dead."[5] The two fished the script around to various studios for years, but to no avail.

Following the end of production on Stern and Winter's MTV sketch comedy show The Idiot Box, co-writer Tim Burns was recruited to join the two in a number of rewrites. The film was completely revisioned, dropping the aspect of the Butthole Surfers entirely and turning it into a full comedy in the vein of the Monty Python and MAD Magazine-inspired humour that was present in The Idiot Box.[6]

Winter and Stern pitched the idea to 20th Century Fox. Joe Roth, the head of the studio at that time, loved the idea and offered the two a twelve million dollar deal to direct it, despite the fact that neither of them had any experience directing a major Hollywood film and had never even shot on 35mm film before. The only condition was that the film had to be rewritten and toned down to fit a PG-13 rating, therefore, most of the profanity was written out of the final draft to fit MPAA standards. Within a month of being picked up, the film began production.[3]

The makeup effects requirements for the film were so substantial, and the lead time before filming was so short, the makeup effects characters for the film were designed and created by three different companies: Tony Gardner's company Alterian, Inc., Steve Johnson's XFX, Inc., and Screaming Mad George's Studio.

20th Century Fox had such high expectations for the film that they released a number of products based on it, including a line of action figures, a novelization and, most notably, a comic book released by Hamilton Comics (however, since the comic was drawn before most of the casting was completed, none of its characters look anything like their real-life counterparts).[5] Four resin figures were sold at Spencer Gifts and Suncoast Motion Picture Company.[7]

Complications

edit

During filming, Joe Roth was fired as studio head by Rupert Murdoch and replaced with Peter Chernin, who didn't like the film nor the fact that twelve million dollars was being invested in it.[5] Chernin cut the film's post-production budget, thus forcing a lot of the soundtrack (including a demo song that Iggy Pop had recorded for the closing credits) and special effects to be greatly cut down or eliminated altogether.[3] The film's title was changed, as well, from the poorly received "Hideous Mutant Freekz" to the supposedly more accessible "Freaked," a title neither Winter nor Stern much cared for.

After several poor test screenings, Fox chose to pull the film from a nationwide release and cut its advertising budget, leaving no money for commercials or newspaper ads.[6]Freaked had its official premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 11, 1993. Despite initial positive critical response, the film opened October 3, 1993 in the United States on only two screens, making a mere $6,957 in its first weekend.[2] It grossed less than $30,000 during its theater run and was released on VHS on April 20, 1994.

Reception

edit

Freaked received a mixed response from critics. Entertainment Weekly described the film as "having more laughs than a month of Saturday Night Live,"[8] The New York Times hailed it as one of the top comedies of the nineties,[9] and John Kricfalusi, the creator of The Ren & Stimpy Show, called it "the funniest movie in years."[citation needed] Alternatively, Variety criticized the film, claiming "the filmmakers simply try too hard to displease,"[10] while Time Out New York stated "the sum is worse than it's [sic] (very ugly) parts."[11] The movie currently holds a 50% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 18 reviews.[12]

Freaked eventually went on to win two awards: the Grand Prize at the 1995 Gérardmer Film Festival and Best Actor (for "The Creatures of the Film") at the 1994 Fantafestival. The film was also nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Make-up.

Freaked has garnered a minor cult following that has grown in the late 2010s and early 2020s with internet content creators such as Cinemassacre, Red Letter Media, Doug Walker and Michael Swaim making retrospectives about the film.

Home media

edit

On July 12, 2005, Anchor Bay Entertainment and 20th Century Fox released a special-edition two-disc DVD, featuring extra material, including deleted scenes, audio commentary, behind-the-scenes footage and two short films from Alex Winter and Tom Stern, the 15-minute film noir parody Squeal Of Death and a black-and-white skit titled NYU Sight & Sound Project.[13]

On August 6, 2013, Anchor Bay and Starz Inc. released the movie on Blu-ray.[14] The Blu-ray does not include any of the bonus features from the DVD release. Both the Blu-ray and DVD are out print and considered to be collectors items. The film is also currently unavailable on digital streaming.

Soundtrack

edit

A soundtrack release for Freaked was planned, but following the loss of their post-production budget, the idea never came to fruition. The score was composed by Kevin Kiner, with additional music by Paul Leary and Butthole Surfers, and Blind Idiot God. In 2020, Death Waltz Recording Co. released the soundtrack and score as a physical LP.[15][16] The songs featured in the film were as follows:

References

edit
  1. ^ "Alex Winter Discusses His 1993 Cult Hit 'Freaked,' Says 'Bill & Ted 3' A Long Way Off From Happening". IndieWire. January 22, 2012. Retrieved December 29, 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Freaked (1993)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved December 29, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d Stern, Tom, Winter, Alex (2005). DVD Commentary for 'Freaked' (DVD). Anchor Bay.
  4. ^ Warren, Bill (March 1993). "Hideous Mutant Freekz are people too". Fangoria. No. 120. Starlog Group, Inc.
  5. ^ a b c "The Official Freekland Website". Freekland.com. 2005. Archived from the original on September 24, 2010. Retrieved September 21, 2007.
  6. ^ a b Tim Burns (2005). A Conversation with Tim Burns (DVD). Anchor Bay.
  7. ^ "Freaked (HIDEOUS MUTANT FREEKZ) 4 pc 9" Resin Figures (1993) Out of Character &#124, #481050098". WorthPoint.
  8. ^ Burr, Ty (October 15, 1993). "EW review of 'Freaked'". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on November 26, 2007. Retrieved September 21, 2007.
  9. ^ Holden, Stephen (October 2, 1993). "Review/Film, Custom-Making Freaks With the Use of Chemicals". The New York Times. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  10. ^ Klady, Leonard (September 14, 1993). "Freaked". Variety. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  11. ^ "Freaked". Time Out New York. 1993. Archived from the original on November 13, 2007. Retrieved September 21, 2007.
  12. ^ "Freaked". Rotten Tomatoes. August 6, 2013. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  13. ^ "Freaked (1993) 2005 DVD". Internet Archive. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  14. ^ "Freaked Blu-ray". Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  15. ^ "Mondo Music Announcement of the Week: Freaked Soundtrack and Screening!". Bleeding Cool. January 8, 2020.
  16. ^ "Freaked – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack 2XLP". Mondo.
edit